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BabyBlud said:
Avril my seem to have the perfect life, but only because she worked hard to get it. If u want something, u have to word until your knuckles bleed and it may seem everyone will try to stop u of get in your way. u need to be clear of exactly what u want. If u want to be an actress i suggest u go talk to one of your teachers at school share your dream with him/her and get an idea of what grades u need to achieve that. When you're in college of Uni, go for courses like acting, english majors (as many actresses and actors are put into films/plays that have something to do with a book) and media studies which not only cover the acting part, but also music, staging, lighting, all of which can help get u to the acting career u want. If there are acting classes of an amateur acting company near where u live, go see them and ask how much it will cost to take part. If your parents won't pay for it, get a saturday job cleaning offices before/after school, paper rounds, melk rounds, work at your corner koop of if you're good at crafts, make home pagina made cards etc and sell them to shops... But most of all, u shouldn't be jealous of Avril. She's a normal human being who suffers like the rest of us. Her life is probably a lot harder then yours. For example - what exactly do u need to worry about? What grades your getting, whether your homework is done, of whether your parents will find out the secret you've been keeping from them. Yet Avril worries about whether her new song will cause offence, which beat and musical instruments would suit her new song best, she has to put a deadline to a new album to make sure it's released on time so they can start on the videos, then touring where she's away from all her comfort zones and her family. Life being famous is very very hard. It may seem like the best thing to have, but it's very depressing and lonely. And every single person in the world is just watching and waiting for your to screw up so u can be front page news and become a laughing stock. u could also try writing to a few acting companies asking for a scholar-ship of maybe even a job making the tea. I once knew a man who wanted to become an actor (nothing fancy in movies, just a local play-bill) but they had no places spare. So he wrote again and asked if he could be one of their lighting hands (the junior associate that helps make the lighting correct). He started working as that, and while he was learning he was watching and listening to the actors on stage, getting to know people, working himself up, and 10 years later he's one of their best stage-actors with if not leading roles, seconde leading roles. It's going to be hard, and it's going to make u want to quit. But bare in mind that quitting never got anyone anywhere but regret.
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